Tag Archive - Emergent Church

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HT: Chuck DeGroat

Cosmic Christ as Second Adam

Yesterday I was following the Twitter feed of the Big Tent Christianity conference (#bigtentx). Wanting to be at the conference, but finding myself on the other side of the country, I decided I’d start my own Twitference, #bigtweetx. It was a rousing success; except, of course, that I was the only one posting. (Speaking of which, if you don’t follow me on Twitter, shame on you. It’s almost as important as following the #JimWest hashtag.) But I digress…

At one point yesterday I was minding the conference’s own business when someones posted a quote that went something like this: “The Bible points to a cosmic Christ. Humans are not the center of God’s love. God loves without limit, without boundary, all in the universe.”

This, its seems to me, gets at the right conclusion from exactly the wrong premise.

I do realize that I got this quote from a 140 character Twitter quote, so this rant may not be aptly aimed at the person who spoke those words. This should not be read as a rant against a person or the conference, but rather the idea that “cosmic Christ” displaces humans in God’s dealing with the cosmos.

The cosmic Christ that the Bible speaks of is none other than the human Jesus who was enthroned to God’s right hand. This is the preexistent son, but the one who takes up humanity’s calling to be son of God on earth and therefore the ones through whom God’s blessing is mediated to the world.

The biblical narrative is, in fact, one in which humans play the key role. I worry that the Christian obsession with the divinity of Jesus makes us blind to the fact that his humanity isn’t something that needs to be explained away or, even, explained. The only way for God’s set-up of the world to work is if a human (or a people) comes along who can actually fulfill the role that God gave Adam and Eve: rule the world on God’s behalf.

What needs explaining is not that a human comes along who actually does this (Jesus), but that such a person had to also be the preexistent Son.

The surprise in the “cosmic Christ” is not that humans are taken out of the picture, but that the cosmos over which God enthrones the man Jesus (and us in him!) is larger than this earth alone.

Yes, God loves the whole cosmos. And, the means for expressing his love to it is the special object of his love that is humanity created in God’s own image.

Getting our story straight isn’t about getting over the idea that humans are the center of the universe. It’s about figuring out what it means that we are, in fact, so positioned. And this includes understanding that we’re not objects of love and blessing for our own good only, but for the good of the whole cosmos.

Response to Emerging Church: Sanity Is Possible

I was heartened to day to read the Church of the Nazarene’s statement on Emerging/Emergent churches.

This is one of the most balanced responses I have seen, and coming from a somewhat conservative ecclesiastical body I am even more impressed with its balance and winsomeness.

The statement acknowledges those among the church’s number who are concerned about theological error in the ECs, but also those within its number who think this is one way to faithfully explore what it means to be a follower of Jesus in our postmodern contexts.

Thus, while warning everyone to steer clear of, and to clearly distance themselves from, what the church considers theological error, it also affirms this:

The involvement of many Nazarenes in this conversation reveals a sincere desire to embrace our missional objectives. They are attempting to reach the emerging cultures around us while clearly articulating an orthodox interpretation of Scripture and theology.

Kudos to the Church of the Nazarene for acting on the godly impulse that people within one denomination can differ on ecclesial and missional praxis while still affirming a common theology and working together for the Kingdom of God.

Well done.

Hip Christianity

Yesterday’s post on Brett McCracken’s Wall Street Journal article created some good conversations both online and off. These got me thinking about the question of relevance, or appeal to contemporary culture.

What I found missing in McCracken’s assessment of current movements, as he dismissed them all as being beholden to contemporary culture in a manner unbecoming of the pure gospel of Jesus, is any awareness of the culture-bound nature of everything. And this includes the gospel of Jesus itself.

But more than this, when assessing contemporary attempts at rearticulating the gospel, I think it is important to take into account that we are aware of the category of “culture” in a way that earlier eras were not. When the Reformers wanted to decentralize church authority away from the Pope and offer the liturgy in the vernacular of the people, these were not simply theological judgments, they were also reflections of a rising regionalism and nationalism. The very act of translating the liturgy from Latin into German or translating the Bible into English is an accommodation to culture.

The basic point is simply that everything we do is tied in some way to our culture. And this is not a bad thing. The creation of “systematic theology” is due to a certain cultural location (if you don’t believe me, try to find a Jewish systematic theology). The use of the word euangelion (good news) is due to a certain cultural location and carried overtones that “Jesus died so God might forgive my particular sins” almost never conveys to modern ears.

Culture is not bad. We all do things based on culture. But the danger is when we start looking at the culture we’re comfortable with and start considering that it is not only normal but also normative.

When I see someone critiquing Emergent for simply wanting to be cool, or critiquing books with “sex” in the title assimply trying to be provocative, what I see going on is someone who doesn’t understand how deeply contextualized his own assessment of Christian normalcy is. Traditional Christian culture is its own culture, with roots in various Eurpean and American movements that gave birth to its current incarnations.

And this is where Emergent was and often still continues to be helpful. Even when “it” does not give the right answer, it is asking the right question; namely, what does it look like to faithfully follow Jesus in a society that is increasingly “post-modern” rather than “modern”?

Two points here. First, we have a responsibility to ask this question because we now know that culture affects everything we do. We are realizing that articulating the gospel so that it makes sense for a certain people is not simply the calling of the foreign missionary, but what each of us are doing either wittingly or unwittingly every time we tell the story.

Hipster on Fixie

So, we can either intentionally ask the question, “How do we articulate the gospel in a way that makes sense for our world?” Or we will fall into one of two traps: either getting carried away by our culture to articulate the gospel in ways that it wants to hear without realizing what we’re doing or continuing to speak the gospel so that it only makes sense within the sub-culture of the church. I don’t think that McCracken’s advocacy of the latter is salutary for the church.

Secondly, the people who are asking this question aren’t simply cool urbanites. The people asking this question are folks from all sorts of social settings for whom the church shaped by modernity does not work anymore. When I am at Emergent Conversations, I am always surprised at the number of people I meet who are from rural or small town settings. Often they are there with one or two other people from their church, a covert group of people finding life in following Jesus in new and challenging ways–which ways are neither advocated nor approved of by the old guard who zealously keep watch over the citadels of yesteryear.

Does Christianity need to be “hip”? No, but it needs to be self-aware. To be simultaneously culturally relevant and calling people to a counter-cultural movement is the essence of following Jesus.

This is the same Jesus who came proclaiming that God’s military victory had arrived (Proclaiming the euangelion that the reign of God had drawn near) to a people who had been promised that they would crush the gentiles in military assault (Judah will be the sword in my hand against the Greeks!)–and who roundly rebuked them for not recognizing that Kingdom Come is the fruit of self-giving, redeeming love.

Culturally relevant? To its core.

What the people wanted or expected? Not at all.

Our calling is not to ignore culture and thereby proclaim something that was good news to 19th century Christendom dwellers, but to know the time and place to which we have been called and speak an apt word of reconciliation and repentance.

The Perils of Ignorant Critique

In Friday’s Wall Street Journal there was an article by Brett McCracken entitled, “The Perils of ‘Wannabe Cool’ Christianity.”

It’s not often that I see a Baker press author turning his book (Hipster Christianity) into a mainstream media editorial, so I was intrigued to see what the article would say. I left hoping that the book McCracken has written shows more awareness of the issues he purports to be discussing than this article does.

McCracken describes “emergent” as an attempt to “rebrand Christianity as hip, countercultural, relevant”. At best, this is a thin assessment at worst, it is completely false. Emergent did arise out of cultural awareness, but recognizing that culture is shifting from modernity to postmodernity, and striving to articulate the gospel accordingly, is not the same thing as trying to be hip and relevant.

Indeed, it is hard to imagine a worse description of Emergent than “to rehabilitate Christianity’s image and make it ‘cool’”.

The article later goes on to accuse any Christian who has talked or written about sex of using shock tactics. So Lauren Winner’s Real Sex is nothing other than a way to shock people and look cool by talking about sex in a Christian setting.

And all this from a person who has written a book called Hipster Christianity–if the article is any reflection of what McCracken means by “Hipster,” he doesn’t even understand the word used in the title. He means “Hip” Christianity. (Next time, you might check out the definition of your “movement”on Wikipedia–you’d end up with better data.)

I can only hope that this article is a mulligan and that the book shows actual awareness of the movements he thinks he’s critiquing rather than rumors, hearsay, and other misrepresentations to make McCracken’s own positions look better.

I’ll have a follow-up on this tomorrow, dealing with the larger question that I think is behind McCracken’s critique: what does Christianity have to do with contemporary culture?

If You’re Emergent…

For those of my readers who self-identify (or don’t self-identify but know deep down in your soul that you have affinity) as Emergent, Emerging, post-conservative, post-evangelical, post-liberal, post-post, etc.: go as fast as your fingers can carry you to Jeremy Begbie’s lecture at the Wheaton Theology Conference.

As a voice friendly to Emergent, Begbie explores why Wright’s theology is so compelling to Emergents, as well as a few areas in which Emergents probably need to listen a little more carefully to what we’re too quick to filter-out. In particular, does the Bishop have something to say to those of us who would too quickly cast off institutional church structures as those structures play a role in the realization of the oneness of the church on earth?

Go. Be encouraged and challenged. And feel free to raise questions or critiques here. I might review the lecture on the blog later, but no promises!

Story Fields and the Death of Emergent

Ever since Andrew Jones (a.k.a. Tall Skinny Kiwi) prophesied that 2010 would be the year in which the Emergent Church was declared dead, the internets have been swirling with hearty “Amen”s, “Thanks be to God”s, “What on earth are you talking about?!”s, and “God, I hope not”s.

It seems to me that one of the most sane lines of response has been given by the likes of Danielle Shroyer, and others, who have argued that Emergent isn’t dying, but taking on a new, positive posture in which it’s redefining itself in some manner other than reaction against the status quo.

I recently stumbled upon a website that talks about “Story Fields“: stories that frame our experience and shape our decisions. Much of what these folks are doing for non-Christian policy making is what I’m advocating for in theology: the telling of compelling alternative narratives that create new ways of perceiving the world and our actions within it.

At this site, Tom Atlee talks about how alternative stories get generated and then mature. Talking through the process of change, he charts sources of power and what it takes to give a new story staying power:

  1. “I believe that every emerging culture or movement for social transformation gains its power, above all, through a compelling story field of its own. However, as mentioned above, insofar as the alternative story field is created against the dominant story field, it tends to lend power to the field it is resisting.”
  2. “I believe that compelling, viable alternatives must grow naturally from an inner logic of their own. They can’t be sustained by oppositional energy alone… If… they arise from a truly positive vision, they stand in contrast to but not primarily in opposition to the status quo. Thus they do little to empower that status quo, while at the same time inviting those who are ready for change, into the new story field.”
  3. “The question that remains for any movement is how to translate its positive visions into positive story fields capable of shaping a new culture.”

It seems to me that one likely scenario for Emergent/Emerging/Emergence is that it is reconfiguring its story from opposition to developing its own inner logic.  I don’t necessarily expect Emergent to be around forever. But I do anticipate that the story of reaction will develop, in some quarters, into a positively articulated vision of the kingdom of God. Because of its less antagonistic and oppositional character and its genuine newness, as a story framing the lives of various communities, many will no longer recognize this as Emergent, and maybe that’s for the best.

Even if it’s wrong.